“You look like a ghost,” she said, and handed him bread.

He stayed.

On the third day, he found a man sitting on an upturned barrel outside a burned mill. The man wore the tattered robe of a Dominican friar, but his tonsure had grown into a wild grey thicket.

In the year 1348, a boy named Piero watched his village die.

Her name was Lucia. Her husband had died in the harvest. She was not afraid of the boy because, she said, fear was a luxury she could no longer afford. Piero helped her repair the roof and dig a new well. He taught her child a game with pebbles. At night, they sat by the hearth, and he told her about the kingdom of heaven.

He never saw a gate of pearl. No angel visited. But when the child laughed, Piero felt a tremor in his chest that reminded him of the word peace . When Lucia hummed while she worked, the air seemed fuller. And when a starving traveler appeared at their door one evening—hollow-eyed, alone—Piero heard himself say, “You can stay.”

They walked together for two days. The friar’s name was Tommaso, and he talked to keep the silence at bay. He spoke of the plague as God’s shears, pruning a rotten garden. He spoke of indulgences as a tax on terror. And then, near a frozen river, Tommaso stopped.